Top 10 Utilities ETFs

There is currently an expanding list of 24 ETFs oriented to the utility and infrastructure sector with more on the way. The following analysis features a fair representation of ETFs available. We believe from these investors may choose an appropriate ETF to satisfy the best index-based offerings individuals and financial advisors may utilize.

Utility investments are at the conservative end of investing. Most investors buy them for the steady dividends and lower market volatility. This feature hasn't changed much.

Currently utilities are under significant regulatory and macro-economic pressure. From a regulatory view most utilities need a more contemporary grid but the climate is uncertain given a wide variety of local issues.

Atop this are fuel issues including whether to upgrade older plants with cheap and readily available coal, natural gas, oil or nuclear. Hydro-electric systems seem completely stopped from an environmental view and most available sources have been tapped. Nuclear power seems safe enough for new plants but with an old Fukushima plant and disaster in the public's mind these seem an unlikely source unfortunately. Oil powered utilities are more acceptable but fuel costs are high. Alternative (green) energy is still unavailable in the amount necessary and are more costly. The best bet is natural gas as a choice and utilities are switching to this and away from coal where possible.

Another drag on public utilities is the economic climate. When the economy slows power use drops as well. Perhaps the best example is the high number of vacant homes in the U.S. currently with unused meters.

ETFs are based on indexes tied to well-known index providers including Russell, S&P, Barclays, MSCI, Dow Jones, Wisdom Tree, PowerShares, EG Shares and so forth. Also included are some so-called "enhanced" indexes that attempt to achieve better performance through more active management of the index. Investors should note the holdings we have listed and compare one issue to another in this regard.

ETFs are based on indexes tied to well-known index providers including Russell, S&P, Barclays, MSCI, Dow Jones and so forth. Also included are some so-called "enhanced" indexes that attempt to achieve better performance through more active management of the index.

We feature a technical view of conditions from monthly chart views. Simplistically, we recommend longer-term investors stay on the right side of the 12 month simple moving average. When prices are above the moving average, stay long, and when below remain in cash or short.

For traders and investors wishing to hedge, leveraged and inverse issues are available to utilize from ProShares and where available these are noted.

PSCU follows the S&P SmallCap 600 Utilities Index which takes the SmallCap 600 utility equity components to form the index. The fund was launched in April 2010. The expense ratio is 0.29%. AUM equal $28M and average daily trading volume is 14K shares.

As of June 2012 the annual dividend yield was 3.18% and YTD return -0.87%. The one year return was 7.13%.

DBU follows the WisdomTree Global ex-US Utility Index which follows utility equities from emerging and developed countries with the top 100 by market capitalization included in the index. The fund was launched in October 2006. The expense ratio is 0.58%. AUM equal $27M and average daily trading volume is 10K shares.

As of June 2012 the annual dividend yield was 4.99% and YTD return -1.87%. The one year return was -12.62%. DBU trades commission free at E*Trade.

AXUT follows the MSCI All Country World ex-USA Utilities Index which is a market cap weighted index of developed and emerging market countries. The fund was launched in July 2010. The expense ratio is 0.48%. AUM equal $6M and average daily trading volume is 3K shares. As of June 2012 the annual dividend yield was 9.03% and YTD return -0.39%. The one year return was -15.02%.

With a fund this young but with a sponsor this big you would intuitively believe the fund has a better chance of succeeding versus with a smaller sponsor. Much of the poor growth is due to much unsettled economic issues globally.

FXU follows the StrataQuant Utilities Index which is another "enhanced" index designed around quantitative methodologies by the NYSE Euronext employing the AlphaDEX system of constituent utilities selection from the Russell 1000 Index. The fund was launched in May 2007. The expense ratio is 0.70%. AUM equal $167M with average daily trading volume of 157K shares.

As of June 2012 the annual dividend yield was 1.85% and YTD return -0.39%. The one year return was 0.84%.

PUI follows the Dynamic Utilities Intellidex Index which is a so-called "enhanced" index since rather than a passive index approach the index is designed to select constituents using quantitative analytics intended to provide the greatest return. The fund was launched in October 2005. The expense ratio is 0.60%. AUM equal $41M and average daily trading volume is 9K shares.

As of June 2012 the annual dividend yield was 2.68% and YTD return 5.07%. The one year return was 2.90%.

JXI follows the S&P Global Utilities Index which follows the performance of the global equity market. The fund was launched in September 2006. The expense ratio is 0.48%. AUM equal $270M and average daily trading volume is 34K shares.

As of June 2012 the annual dividend yield was 4.68% and YTD return 0.41%. The one year return was -4.05%.

RYU follows the S&P Equal Weight Index which is not much different from XLU except that by breaking components into equal weights provides a different and perhaps fairer view of overall conditions. The fund was launched in January 2006. The expense ratio is 0.50%. AUM equal $48M and average daily trading volume is less than 8K shares. (NOTE: The sponsor has suffered numerous ownership changes and marketing efforts have been hindered. The structure of the index is sound but the liquidity and fees are still higher than average.) Remember the advantage of an equal weighted index-based ETF is an investor won't be hurt by a bad situation in one but won't be helped by a better performer either.

As of June 2012 the annual dividend yield was 3.36% and YTD return 3.55%. The one year return was 8.71%.

IDU follows the Dow Jones U.S. Utilities Index which also covers the broad spectrum of the utilities sector of the U.S. equity market. The fund was launched in June 2000. The expense ratio is 0.48%. AUM equal $717M and average daily trading volume is 42K shares.

As of June 2012 the annual dividend yield was 2.38% and YTD return 1.85%. The one year return was 11.88%.

VPU follows the MSCI US Investable Market Utilities 25/50 Index which consists of small, medium and large companies. The fund was launched in January 2004. The expense ratio is 0.19%. AUM equal $1B and average daily trading volume is 72K shares.

As of June 2012 the annual dividend yield was 3.46% and YTD return 4.13%. The one year return was 14.56%. VPU trades commission free at Vanguard.

We rank the top 10 ETF by our proprietary stars system as outlined below. However, given that we're sorting these by both short and intermediate issues we have split the rankings as we move from one classification to another.

Established linked index even if "enhanced"Good performance or more volatile if "enhanced" indexAverage to higher fee structureGood portfolio suitability or more active management if "enhanced" indexDecent liquidity

Enhanced or seasoned indexLess consistent performance and more volatileFees higher than averagePortfolio suitability would need more active tradingAverage to below average liquidity

Index is newIssue is new and needs seasoningFees are highPortfolio suitability also needs seasoningLiquidity below average

It's also important to remember that ETF sponsors have their own competitive business interests when issuing products which may not necessarily align with your investment needs. New ETFs from highly regarded and substantial new providers are also being issued. These may include Charles Schwab's ETFs and Scottrade's Focus Shares which both are issuing new ETFs with low expense ratios and commission free trading at their respective firms. These may also become popular as they become seasoned.

(Source for data is from ETF sponsors and various ETF data providers.)

Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. The ETF Digest is long XLU.

We only use your contact details to reply to your request for more information.We do not sell the personal contact data you submit to anyone else.

Thank you for your interest in Seeking Alpha PROWe look forward to contacting you shortly for a conversation.

Thank you for your interest in Seeking Alpha PRO

Our PRO subscription service was created for fund managers, and the cost of the product is
prohibitive for most individual investors.
PRO Alerts is our flagship product for individual investors who want to be faster
and smarter about their stocks. To learn more about it, click here.
If you are an investment professional with over $1M AUM and received this message
in error, click here and you will be contacted shortly.

Thank you for your interest in Seeking Alpha PROWe look forward to contacting you when we have an individual investor product ready!